What are your cost of living increases looking like this year?
With inflation soaring and the tech market roaring, I seem to have spontaneously been given a 10% hike (I only know so far because there is a precise 10% increase on my pay slip).
Want to know if that is in line with others.
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 14.6 ms ] threadRecruiting costs have also gone up from 15% to as high as 25% of base per resource.
The going rate for hourly labor was 150/hr per head, but I haven’t talked to my contacts yet to see if that’s moved.
I would expect it to go to 175/hr, and premium rates to go to 200/hr. These rates would also reflect changes from agencies, and so should be in line.
Unrelated, but I was also hearing about a 25% increase in real estate in Albuquerque, New Mexico rent.
In Arizona commercial real estate, contractors had back-to-back single digit percent price hikes which I’m sure totaled double digit increases for the year.
I’m seeing substantial inflation, and anticipate this year’s real inflation to be in the double digits, and not the 5% the BLS is reporting.
That shopping trolley gets emptier and more expensive by the week.
Some items that I have actually noticed increase in price, have been around 20%. But that was likely just because the increase was a glaring example.
I went permanent WFH and that has been a gigantic reduction in expenses so we're doing pretty good now.
I haven't noticed inflationary effects in the stuff we buy. Food seems a bit more expensive but everything else we buy hasn't really jumped in price, or at least enough that made us notice it.
IT wages after taxes would likely be competitive too at my experience level and with possible tax exemption, but I'm retired.
Ended up moving back in with my parents to work remotely for the pandemic. Its been pretty nice. Realisticly I might have gone the rest of my life only seeing them 2-3 times a year around the holidays and I think that would have been really sad